Best Book of Black Biographies!
Transcription
Best Book of Black Biographies!
The BESTBook of Meets National Standards BLACK BIOGRAPHIES by Carole Marsh The BESTBook of BLACK BIOGRAPHIES by Carole Marsh Editorial Assistant: Jenny Corsey • Graphic Design: Cecil Anderson ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 1 ©2009, 2004 Carole Marsh/Gallopade International/Peachtree City, GA Permission is hereby granted to the individual purchaser or classroom teacher to reproduce materials in this book for non-commercial individual or classroom use only. Reproduction of these materials for an entire school or school system is strictly prohibited. Published by G TM 800-536-2GET www.gallopade.com Gallopade is proud to be a member of these educational organizations and associations: Association for the Study of African American Life and History National Alliance of Black School Educators American Booksellers Association American Library Association International Reading Association National Association for Gifted Children The National School Supply and Equipment Association The National Council for the Social Studies Museum Store Association Association of Partners for Public Lands Association of Booksellers for Children ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 2 Black Jazz, Pizzazz, & Razzmatazz Books Our Black Heritage Coloring Book The Big Book of African American Activities Black Heritage GameBook: Keep Score! Have Fun! Find out how much you already know—and learn lots more! Black Trivia: The African American Experience A-to-Z! Celebrating Black Heritage: 20 Days of Activities, Reading, Recipes, Parties, Plays, and More! Mini Timeline of Awesome African American Achievements and Events “Let’s Quilt Our African American Heritage & Stuff It Topographically!” The Color Purple & All That Jazz!: African American Achievements in the Arts “Out of the Mouths of Slaves”: African American Oral History The Kitchen House: How Yesterday’s Black Women Created Today’s Most Popular & Famous American Foods! Black Business: African American Entrepreneurs & Their Amazing Success! Other Carole Marsh Books Meet Shirley Franklin: Mayor of Atlanta! African American Readers—Many to choose from! ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 3 Table of Contents A Word From the Author . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 5 Chief Anderson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 6 Barack Obama . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 7 Lorraine Hansberry, Ray Charles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 8 Matthew Henson . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 9 Jesse Owens, Benjamin Banneker . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 10 Nat King Cole, Charles Richard Drew . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 11 Jean Baptiste Du Sable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 12 Gwendolyn Brooks, W.C. Handy . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 13 Jan Ernst Matzeliger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 14 William Henry Hastie, Wilma Rudolph . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 15 Harriet Tubman . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 16 Dean Dixon, Richard Allen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 17 Leontyne Price . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 18 Lawrence Joel, Frederick Douglass . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 19 Mahalia Jackson, Thurgood Marshall . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 20 Ethel Waters . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 21 Daniel Hale Williams, Willie Mays . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 22 Quotes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 24 Black History Trail . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 25 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., Colin Powell, Condoleezza Rice . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 27 Noted Black Americans . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 29 Black Servicemen . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 34 Black Lifesavers of the Outer Banks/Black Heroes of September 11th! . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 35 Index . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .page 36 ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 4 A Word From the Author What is a biography, anyway? We usually think of it as the life story of someone famous. When someone has achieved a special goal, accomplished something significant in history, discovered something that will help mankind, or created a work of art—we want to know more about that person. What they were really like. Why—and how—they did what they did. What it means to them, and to us. Would they do it again? Why or why not? What can we learn from their life? I think the best biographies are of the ordinary person. We may not even know their name, but their life can be fascinating to us. Everyone has a biography (even a kid!)—a life story of what has happened to them and what they have done up to this point. While you might think your biography is boring, it may be very exciting to someone who has lived an entirely different kind of life in a completely different type of place. I like a biography that tells the truth. When we only learn the good side of the person, what they have done right, we don’t learn how they accomplished in spite of problems and failures. These are part of every life too. Trial and error. Giving up. Starting over. What can a kid learn from a biography? How other people have had to live their lives. And how they have chosen to live their lives. How everything you learn and do becomes part of the you that can often go on and do great things in spite of (and often because of!) a hard life, poverty, discrimination, handicaps, and other negative things that only you can turn to positive! You can learn that we’re all pretty much alike. We have the same wants and hopes and dreams and fears and doubts. Some are smarter. Some have more money. Others may have more patience. Or determination. You can learn that we’re all pretty special. We all have something important to do while we’re here on Earth. We may not know exactly what that is. We may never even find out. But when we can look and see how others may also have thought they had little to contribute, but made a great difference, even in the life of one other person—we can have hope that what we do is important too. In fact the most important biographies have never (and probably never will) be written. If they were, they would be the biographies of our grandparents, our mothers, our fathers, our brothers and sisters, our aunts and uncles, our special friends, the teachers who helped us, the employer who gave us our first job, even our beloved pets. After you read this book about some famous and not so famous folks, I hope you will begin to look for biographies everywhere! In the newspaper, on television, in your schoolbooks, in letters, in conversations. After all, biographies are not written all at once. They are written like our lives. One day at a time. Carole Marsh ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 5 Pilot You’ve heard the airline slogan, “Fly the friendly skies”? Well as you might imagine, the first black man who decided he wanted to be an airline pilot found the skies pretty unfriendly. In fact, he was chased from the airport with a broom! But, Charles Alfred “Chief” Anderson went on to earn his commercial license and train America’s first black fighter pilots. A very important figure in aviation… a darn good pilot… and a fabulous man is how another pilot describes him—and that pilot is Chuck Yeager! What makes any kid want to be an airline pilot? Anderson was inspired by Charles Lindbergh’s flight in the Spirit of St. Louis. The very next year, 1928, he took his first plane up. There was a lot of prejudice against the idea of black pilots. Some people thought they were not smart enough or brave enough to fly. To discourage Anderson, someone put sand in his oil tank. Someone even pulled the cotter pins out of his plane’s controls—which can make you crash. Another time his plane was sabotaged when he was taking aerobatic training. None of this kept Anderson from pursuing his high-flying dream. He’d been interested in flying since he was eight years old. At age 21, he talked his neighbors into lending him $2,500. He bought an airplane and tried his first takeoffs and landings all by himself with no instruction or help. Not all his flights were smooth! Anderson once flew his plane into a tree. He has a scar for a souvenir. His mother was so upset, she took an ax and tried to chop up his plane. Even though Anderson studied all aspects of flying on his own—meteorology, mechanics, etc.—there was much to learn and no one willing to help him. The first time he tried a tailspin, no one expected to see him again. After smashing another airplane, Anderson had to resort to gambling to get money to rent planes. At last, Anderson found a man to help him learn all that he needed to get a commercial pilot’s license. He received the top license and became a young hero to black boys who thought they’d love to fly too. In 1933, Anderson made his first transcontinental flight. His budget was so tight, he had to fly without navigation instruments, a radio, or even a parachute! To guide himself, he used a regular, old road map. Until it blew away! His headlight was a flashlight held out the window. Two and a half days later he was greeted by the applause of a crowd of 2,000 blacks at the Los Angeles, California airport. Next, he flew to the Bahama Islands. Since a plane had never landed on Nassau before, the people didn’t ever understand they had to get out of the way so the plane could land. When they figured out what the plane was trying to do, they lined their cars up on each side of the road and turned their lights on to make a “runway.” Anderson once flew in rain so hard that it ripped the paint off the plane. He ended his exciting tour by crashing into a grove of bamboo! ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 6 Later, Anderson taught others to fly. The Tuskegee Institute hired him to start a training program. One day, First Lady Eleanor Roosevelt came to visit Tuskegee. Anderson invited to take her on a spin and off they went. Mrs. Roosevelt confessed to him that she had always wanted to learn to fly. Up until that time, blacks were not allowed to fly in the Air Corps. In spite of continuing prejudice, the black pilots formed the 99th Pursuit Squadron. But World War II finally required all the fighter pilots the United States could muster. In their first big opportunity to show what they could do, Anderson’s men shot down an amazing eight planes in one day. The 99th joined with other black squadrons to form the 332nd Fighter Group, who never lost a single one of the bombers they escorted to the enemy. Even though over half of these pilots received honors and awards, none could find a job as a pilot after the war. Even today, there are very, very few black pilots working with America’s major airlines. Today, Anderson is in his 80s—and still flying. Of course! President Barack Obama is the first African American president of the United States. He was elected to that office in 2008. Barack was born in Hawaii. His father, Barack Obama Sr., was a black man from Kenya who had won a scholarship to attend the University of Hawaii. His mother, Ann Dunham, was a white woman whose parents had moved to Hawaii from Kansas. After spending most of his childhood in Hawaii, Barack attended Columbia University in New York, majoring in political science. He moved to Chicago a few years after graduation and worked with local programs to help poor people get better jobs. In 1988, Barack entered Harvard Law School. He became the first African American editor of the Harvard Law Review, which is an important journal written by students. After graduation from Harvard Law School in 1991, Barack married a fellow lawyer named Michelle Robinson. They settled in Chicago where Barack worked for a law firm and began teaching law at the University of Chicago Law School. Barack’s political career began in 1996 when he was elected Illinois state senator. In 2000, he ran for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives but was defeated. He ran for state senate again in 2002 and won. In 2004, Illinois voters elected him to the U.S. Senate. Just a few years later, Barack announced his candidacy for president of the United States. He won a long, hard-fought campaign for the Democratic nomination, where his chief rival was former First Lady and New York Senator Hillary Clinton. In 2008, Barack Obama was elected 44th president of the United States, making history as the first African American to hold that office! In his victory speech, he proclaimed that “change has come to America.” In 2009, he won the Nobel Peace Prize for efforts to strengthen cooperation between peoples. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 7 Playwright Who is Lorraine Hansberry? The famous playwright who wrote A Raisin in the Sun. The 1959 drama is about a black family struggling to make a new and better life for themselves. The original Broadway play was praised by the audience and the critics and won many awards. In 1961 a movie was made by the same title. In 1989, Public Television presented a special 3-hour unabridged* premier of the play on American Playhouse. The play focuses on a short period in the life of the Younger family. They receive an insurance check for $10,000 and each person in the family has a special dream about how it should be spent. Lena, the mother, wants to buy a house. Walter, the son, wants to start his own business. Daughter Beneatha hopes to go to medical school and change the world. Walter’s wife, Ruth, is caught between the dreams. They struggle to make the right choice. The play touches on racism, feminism, black identity, pride and liberation. It is very tense and dramatic. You can’t help but get caught up in their emotional decision. What does the play really mean? It shows the strength of the human spirit as it tells the story of one family’s refusal to sacrifice human dignity at any price. Have you ever seen this play? If not, perhaps you can check it out of your library. Teachers: could your students read the play aloud in class or get a copy of the PBS play? Parents: could your family turn off the television one night and read the play, each person taking a part? Perhaps you’d like to try your hand at writing your own play… and even performing it! *What does unabridged mean? Singer, Pianist Have you ever turned on your radio and heard the songs, Georgia on My Mind or Born to Lose? The very special voice singing these songs belongs to Ray Charles. He used to be Ray Charles Robinson when he was born in 1930 in Albany, Georgia. And he was not born rich and famous. “Even compared to other blacks we were at the bottom of the ladder looking up at everyone else,” he once said. When he was seven years old, an illness left him blind. It was when he was a charity student at St. Augustine’s School in Florida that he discovered he had the gift of music. He learned to compose and arrange music in his head and would speak out each part one at a time. He taught himself to play the piano, the organ, clarinet and saxophone and learned to write music in braille. In Seattle, Washington, in 1948, while he was still very young, he organized the McSon ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 8 Trio. This was the first black musical group to have their own television show in the northwest U. S. That was when he began developing his special style, a sound known as a “gritty” rhythm and blues. And he called himself Ray Charles. At first he was best known as a “soul” singer. But his music was strongly influenced by the sounds of the blues, jazz, and country and western music. In the 1950s he had his first hit record, I Got A Woman. He appeared at the famous Apollo Theater in New York City’s Harlem district. And he toured the United States playing and singing with a famous band. After Georgia on My Mind and Born to Lose zoomed to the top of the record charts, he became popular all around the world. He won 10 Grammy Awards and was honored by the Kennedy Center in Washington, D. C., the government of France, the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, The National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), and many others. The State of Georgia named Georgia on My Mind as its official state song. And many people say his America the Beautiful (which he performed for the 1984 Republican National Convention) is our “second national anthem.” His biography, Brother Ray, was published and featured on television’s 20/20 and 60 Minutes shows. You might think a famous singer like this would only go to the large towns to perform. But in 1989, Ray Charles went to Wilson, North Carolina to play and sing in honor of the opening of that town’s new art center. When you hear that “gritty” voice accompanied by an orchestra—you’ll remember that it is none other than Ray Charles. Ray Charles died in 2004. Explorer During the early 1900s, many people wanted to be the first to discover the North Pole. Explorer Robert Peary led an Arctic expedition in 1909 to find the Pole. Robert asked Matthew Henson, a black explorer, to be his partner. The American explorers battled harsh winds and cold temperatures (as low as 60 degrees below zero!) with the help of dogs and Eskimos. The group split up to search in different directions. Matthew Henson discovered the North Pole first! Since Matthew was black, Robert asked him not to speak publicly about his discovery. They planted the American flag there on April 6, 1909. Robert was given credit for Matthew’s discovery. The President even made Robert an admiral. Everyone received medals except for Matthew. After the discovery, Matthew worked in a parking garage until some black politicians got him a better job. His accomplishments were not recognized until several years later. Riddle: Where do you go from the North Pole? Answer: South! There is no east, west or north! ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 9 (Henson continued) THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Born in Charles County, Maryland Mother and father die when he is a boy Dreams of being a sailor but works as a dishwasher Becomes a sailor Works in a clothing store Meets Robert Peary and goes to Nicaragua—(where is that?) Works as a messenger Goes to Greenland without pay and becomes an explorer and leader Learns to speak Eskimo, build a sled and igloo, handle a dog team, hunt seal, bear, and musk ox ● After 7 trips where he did not reach his goal, REACHES HIS GOAL! THE NORTH POLE! Track Star Jesse Owens, the grandson of slaves, broke 5 world records in track and field events during the 1936 Olympic Games in Berlin, Germany. He won 4 gold medals! THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Born on tenant farm in Alabama; 1 of 7 children Works in cotton fields Scrubs floors and does odd jobs to make money Works in a shoe shop; dreams of having his own shop In spite of being small, goes out for track Defeated in trials for 1932 Olympics Receives scholarship to Ohio State University Called the “Buckeye Bullet” and “the greatest one-man track team” Works at service station to help pay expenses Directs athletic program for U. S. armed forces during World War II Goodwill ambassador for America The Peaceful Inventor Benjamin Banneker became an astronomer, mathematician, poet, clockmaker, surveyor and crusader for freedom. THE FACTS: ● Born near Baltimore, Maryland, 1731 ● Loves to read ● Has to drop out of school to help his farmer father; continues to teach himself at home ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 10 (Banneker continued) ● Builds the first wooden clock (all the parts were made of wood) in America ● Parents die ● Accurately predicts an eclipse of the sun ● Publishes an almanac (what’s that?) ● First black to receive a presidential appointment ● Helps plan the layout of streets and buildings in Washington, D. C. for President George Washington ● Writes a plan for peace; 100 years later the League of Nations, similar to his plan, is begun by President Woodrow Wilson ● Works for world peace and freedom for all people Entertainer Nat King Cole was a performing genius! He sang and played jazz piano on radio and television. Nat also starred in movies and even opened his own company. Nat valued his family so much that he traveled less to be with them. One of his most famous songs is the “Unforgettable” duet, that he sang with his daughter Natalie. THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Born in 1919 Learns to play piano from his mother At age 4, can play several songs At age 12, plays piano and sings in church Professional pianist before finishing high school Known as honest, down-to-earth person who helps others Forms a trio which has hard times but becomes a top jazz group Though he “sounds like a frog”, becomes a popular singer As a sports lover, has a permanent seat in Dodger Stadium and helps sponsor Little League teams ● Quits traveling so he can be with his family more + perform for adults and children ● Helps gain respect for hard work and being a gentleman Scientist The director of the first American Red Cross Blood Bank was Dr. Charles Drew. THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● Born in Washington, D. C., 1904 Oldest of five children Talented athlete all through school Works as coach and athletic director ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 11 (Drew continued) ● Quits work to attend medical school; graduates with honors ● Takes two extra years of special training ● Works as teacher in university medical school + assistant surgeon ● Returns to school to study surgery ● Develops the process of preserving blood plasma for later use ● Directs a project to treat soldiers with blood plasma ● Sets up blood donor stations during World War II; this saves thousands of lives ● American Red Cross uses his system as model for first American Blood Bank ● Dies at age 45 Think of how many, many lives his hard work on the gathering and saving of blood for later use has saved! Have you every thought of donating blood? Do you know anyone who has ever had a transfusion? Settler Called America’s greatest “black pioneer”, Jean Baptiste Du Sable established a settlement that became which city? THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Born around 1745 in Haiti; father a pirate, mother a slave Mother dies; he goes to boarding school Works for father who has become a merchant Sails to America, but boat wrecks in a hurricane Rescued and set ashore at New Orleans Builds a boat and goes up Mississippi River to St. Louis Learns to speak an Indian language Travels to Canada Returns and joins an Indian tribe Moves to an area of the prairie that even the Indians won’t have Builds a fort, home, barns, forge, mill, smokehouse, workshops; others join settlement Arrested during French-Indian war, but set free for lack of evidence Becomes a guide for missionaries, trappers, hunters and explorers Friend of the great Indian chief Pontiac and Daniel Boone Indian tribe wants to make him their chief, but he declines Moves to St. Charles, Missouri and helps new pioneers trade and bargain with Indians Yes, Du Sable moved on, but his settlement stayed put and grew and grew. Into what? Into the city of Chicago! ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 12 Poet Later, a young girl would live in Chicago. THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Born 1917 in Topeka, Kansas Family moves to Chicago Publishes her first poem at age 13 Completes junior college Works in offices, for newspaper and on a magazine Takes poetry classes Published in national magazines Published a book of poetry Named as one of “Ten Women of the Year” 1950, becomes first black to receive Pulitzer Prize for Annie Allen, a book of poems Gwendolyn Brooks said a writer must watch and see what is going on around them, then try to describe this so others can see it too and share the experience. Could you do this? Why don’t you try it today? Right now! Father of the Blues Another talented writer, W. C. Handy, looked around him and wrote about the sad and happy things he saw. THE FACTS: ● Born in Florence, Alabama, 1873 ● Makes his own musical instruments out of combs, pots and pans ● At age 12 buys a guitar; his parents make him exchange it for a dictionary ● Takes music lessons secretly since parents are opposed to him becoming a musician ● Joins circus band; gets a whipping ● Teaches school ● Works in a foundry (what’s that?—trade your guitar for a dictionary and look it up!) ● Loses his job; organizes a musical group ● Hitchhikes to sing at World’s Fair, but it is postponed ● Does odd jobs including street paving ● Joins a successful minstrel group and travels all over the United States + Mexico and Cuba ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 13 (Handy continued) ● Begins to write blues songs about the joys, fears, sad and happy times of ordinary, day-to-day life ● At age 80, loses eyesight ● Continues to perform in night clubs + on radio and tv ● Organizes a guild to help young musicians + a foundation for the blind His most famous song is the St. Louis Blues. Do you know that song? It begins, “I hate to see the evening sun go down . . .” Inventor Jan Ernst Matzeliger did not live to see the good his invention did. THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● Born 1852 in South America At age 10, works in a machine shop Family moves to Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; he becomes a shoemaker Moves to Lynn, Massachusetts and works in a shoe factory (What is a 7-letter for for a shoemaker? Remember, making shoes at that time was a very hard job. And very slow, since they were made completely by hand. This meant the shoemaker had to bend over his workbench all day. It took a lot of hours just to make one shoe.) ● Decides to make a machine to make shoes; has very little money and time to work on the project. He even has to make the tools he will work with. He makes models of his plan out of scrap wood and cigar boxes. He uses an old forge to make the moving parts. After many years, he has a machine that cuts the time to make a shoe in half! ● His invention makes Lynn the shoe capital of the world and a company worth millions of dollars Does this invention not seem especially important to you? Well, think about it: Before the creation of this machine, only a few skilled workers made shoes. Because of this, and the fact that it took so long to make them, shoes were very expensive. With the new machine, thousands of new jobs were created. Since the shoes could be made by unskilled workers and made so much faster, the cost of the shoes was cut in half. Therefore, many more people could afford shoes—and more shoes. The back-breaking work of making shoes was eliminated. Shoes cost less, but workers made more. Just exactly how did this affect the production of shoes? In a short time, United States shoe exports zoomed from 1 million to over 11 million pairs a year! Even today, you can find a Matzeliger-type machine in almost every modern shoe factory. WHAT MACHINE WOULD YOU LIKE TO INVENT? ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 14 Judge William Hastie was the first black to become a federal judge in America. THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Born 1904, Knoxville, Tennessee Family moves to Washington, D. C. Graduates from Amherst College with honors Works as teacher Graduates from Harvard Law School with honors Teaches and practices law Appointed government lawyer; helps protect rights of Indians and Eskimos Helps organize a company to provide jobs for workers in the Virgin Islands; writes act that gives Virgin Islanders self-government ● Appointed judge by President Franklin Roosevelt ● Becomes law professor ● Serves as advisor to the U. S. Secretary of War; helps improve training conditions of black servicemen ● Named head of law school ● Appointed Governor of the Virgin Islands; first black governor of U. S. state or overseas territory ● Named federal judge Above all things, Judge Hastie believed in obeying the law. He spent much of his time using his legal talents to help people who could not help themselves. He believed in freedom and justice for all. To Judge Hastie, the words on official seals and taken in oaths are not just words to say and not mean—they are words to live by every day no matter who you are or what you do. IF YOU WERE A JUDGE, WOULD YOU BE LIBERAL OR CONSERVATIVE? Athlete Wilma Rudolph won 3 gold medals in track and field events in the 1960 Olympics. She also won a bronze medal in her first Olympic competition – at age 16! Wilma, who only weighed 4 pounds at birth, overcame her childhood handicap of polio to become an American Olympic heroine! That’s amazing! ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 15 (Rudolph continued) THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● Born 1940 in Tennessee; not expected to live Very ill as a child; unable to walk In spite of a weak leg, participates in all sports Sets records in basketball in high school Becomes high school track star Becomes college track star while making good grades and working half a day in the school offices ● Wins 3 gold medals in the 1960 Olympics; named Female Athlete of the Year I think the most important thing you can say about Wilma Rudolph is that she didn’t give up. Never. Ever! Champion of Freedom “ … performed wonders in the cause of freedom” reads a bronze marker about Harriet Tubman. See if you agree. THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● Born a slave At age 26, marries a free man and decides she wants to be free too Decides to run away from her master; fails Tries again; travels at night, hides during day; many whites, blacks and Quakers help her with food, shelter and directions ● Reaches the free soil of Pennsylvania ● Worked in Philadelphia to save money to help free other slaves ● Studies “Underground Railroad” of people who would help slaves on their road to freedom ● Makes 19 trips in 10 years helping more than 300 slaves escape ● Helps free slaves move on to Canada where they cannot be recaptured ● Volunteers for Union Army during Civil War; serves as nurse, scout and spy ● Organizes freed slaves to serve as scouts and spies ● Buys farm near Auburn, New York ● Receives Diamond Jubilee Medal from Queen of England ● Dies when she is almost 100 years old Can you see why she was often called “General Tubman” and is still greatly admired for her work in the cause of freedom? ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 16 Conductor Not train conductor—symphony conductor! THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● Born 1915, New York City Father dies Learns to read books and music At age 6, takes violin lessons Plays in high school orchestra + forms own orchestra and is conductor— anyone can join ● Graduates from the Juilliard School of Music ● Studies conducting at Columbia University ● Performs classical music for schoolchildren ● Age 23, conducts a concert for League of Music Lovers ● Conducts 70-member orchestra (ages 12-72) ● Invited to be guest conductor of NBC-TV Summer Symphony ● Leader of National Youth Administration Orchestra ● Organizes American Youth Orchestra ● Gives concerts for 3-year-olds; even lets them sit on stage beside musicians ● Performs “Symphonies at Midnight” for people who work in the evenings and cannot attend any other time ● Receives Award of Merit for work with young people ● Invited to serve as musical director of an orchestra in Paris, France ● Receives similar invitations from many countries ● Head conductor (and first American) of Swedish Goteborg Symphony ● Musical director, Sydney, Australia Symphony Orchestra Being a conductor is one of the hardest jobs in music. Dean Dixon went to work every day at 6 o’clock in the morning. He conducted for 6-8 hours and planned for 8-10 hours. He lost as much as 7 pounds in each concert! He has been called “America’s Musical Ambassador.” Can you see why? Minister Richard Allen was the first black bishop in America. THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● Born a slave in 1760, near Philadelphia, Pennsylvania Separated from mother and younger brothers and sisters at age 7 Learns to read and write Becomes leader in Methodist Society ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 17 (Allen continued) ● Works as a wagon driver to save money to buy his freedom ● Buys freedom for himself and his brother ● Becomes traveling preacher ● Learns to make shoes so he can teach blacks a trade ● Serves as helper at St. George Methodist Church ● Organizes Bethel Church ● Organizes and trains blacks to care for sick and bury dead during yellow fever epidemic ● Organizes many churches in other cities ● Continues to build his shoe business and give jobs to others ● Ordained as deacon ● Organizes African Methodist Episcopal Church; elected and consecrated as a bishop Today, the denomination Bishop Allen founded has more than a million members in several hundred churches which sponsor several colleges. Singer She was called “queen of the operatic world.” THE FACTS: ● Born in Laurel, Mississippi ● Takes first piano lesson, age 4; practices on toy piano; when can’t afford the $2.00 lessons, her mother does the teacher’s washing and ironing in exchange for lessons ● Graduates from college with teaching degree ● Wins music scholarship to Juilliard School of Music ● Ira Gershwin gives her leading role in opera, Porgy and Bess ● Introduces many new composers’ works ● Becomes first black, in title role, to appear in television opera, Tosca ● In Vienna, stars in opera, Aida ● Stars in opera Il Trovatore at Metropolitan Opera in New York; receives 42 minute ovation, longest in the history of the company ● Receives Freedom Medal from President Lyndon Johnson ● Accompanies La Scala Opera Company of Italy to Russia ● Receives Italian Award of Merit ● Helps School of Arts project give affordable lessons to children ● Raises money for United Negro College Fund “You must like what you are doing if you want to be happy and successful,” she has said. And Leontyne Price loves opera and helping others. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 18 Medic Lawrence Joel said he was “just a soldier, and a soldier does his job.” See what you think: THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● Born in North Carolina; raised by foster parents Cares for neighborhood animals Volunteers for Medical Corp in U. S. Army Serves in Vietnam; while treating wounded during battle, he is shot in leg; bandages leg and continues to treat the wounded soldiers; he is shot again; bandages his wound and treats more soldiers until and after battle finally ends ● Receives Congressional Medal of Honor, America’s highest award for valor Illustration courtesy of U.S. Army Institute of Heraldry The Medal of Honor is given to soldiers who show “courage above and beyond the call of duty.” Do you think this man deserved that honor? Public Speaker & Newspaperman Can a person rebel against something, yet work with the enemy to help achieve his goal? See for yourself. THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Born a slave in Maryland about 1817; lives with grandmother At age 7, sent to work on the plantation Goes to Baltimore to care for his master’s nephew Learns to read; at 13 buys first book about freedom with money earned from shining shoes ● Spends year with slave breaker who whips him for each mistake ● Sent to work for a new master; runs away but is caught Works in a shipyard; runs away Marries and moves to Massachusetts Invited to speak on slavery Flees to England to escape being caught and returned With money from English friends, returns to America and buys his freedom Starts his own newspaper, The North Star Active in Underground Railroad Advises President Abraham Lincoln to free slaves ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 19 (Douglass continued) ● Promotes education for blacks ● Serves as U. S. Marshal for Washington, D. C. ● Appointed Recorder of Deeds for District of Columbia ● Becomes Minister to Haiti From the time he was a child, Frederick Douglass rebelled against the idea of slavery. He chose to use his freedom of speech and working with the government he often opposed to bring about change and freedom for all people. Gospel Singer She’s been called the world’s greatest gospel singer. THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● Born in 1911 in New Orleans Is an orphan by the age of 6 Does washing and ironing to earn living by age 10 Age 16, goes to Chicago; works in a factory for $1.00 a day + scrubbing floors and curling hair ● Joins a church and sings in choir; made main soloist of special group ● Makes record, Move On Up a Little Higher; it sells 1 million+ copies ● Invited to give concert in Carnegie Hall in New York City ● Tours in Denmark, France and England ● Invited to sing at White House ● Refuses to sing in bars and night clubs Mahalia Jackson never had music lessons. But the lessons she learned at church educated her for a life as a singer of gospel music that is loved, as she is, the world over. WHAT DO YOU WANT TO BE WHEN YOU ARE AN ADULT? Supreme Court Justice Who is responsible for “truth and justice for all?” Thurgood Marshall was appointed to serve as the first black Supreme Court Justice. He was also a very smart civil rights lawyer. Thurgood won many cases that changed the lives of blacks, women, and the poor. America might not enjoy racial justice today without Thurgood Marshall! ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 20 (Marshall continued) THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● Born in Baltimore, Maryland Works his way through college as a waiter Refused admission to all-white law school Graduates from another law school Sets up his own law practice Appointed chief legal counsel for the N. A. A. C. P.; in 23 years, wins all but 3 of 32 cases before Supreme Court ● Appointed as federal judge by President John Kennedy ● Named U. S. Solicitor General by President Lyndon Johnson ● Served as Associate Justice of Supreme Court until 1991. Truth and justice for all do not just happen. People like Thurgood Marshall see that they happen. Singer/Actress “No one understood me,” Ethel Waters said of her childhood. Have you ever felt this way? THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Born on Halloween in 1900 in slums of Chester, Pennsylvania Has unhappy childhood and is leader of a street gang Moves to quieter life in Philadelphia and attends school Married at age 13; separated after one year Becomes hotel maid Age 17, gets singing job as “Sweet Mama Stringbean” Becomes overnight success as blues singer Appears on stage and in movies and on television Ethel Waters never forget the struggle she had to achieve her goals. She worked to help others have an easier time sharing their talents. There are so many awesome African American achievements and accomplishments in history. Yes! We should celebrate them all! ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 21 Surgeon In 1893 Dr. Daniel Williams made medical history. He became a very respected doctor after he performed the world’s first successful open-heart operation. Before that operation, no one had opened a person’s heart before to repair damage directly. His groundbreaking work led to operations on the brain, lungs, and other major body parts. Dr. Hale founded the black Provident Hospital in Chicago, Illinois as well as the first black nursing school in Washington, D.C. His patients called him Dr. Dan because they felt he was more like a friend than a doctor. THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Born, 1858, Pennsylvania; Father dies, family moves to Wisconsin Enters school with a dictionary as his only book Age 12, works in barber shop Studies law, but wants to be doctor Works with doctor and studies his medical books after work Works his way through medical school Teaches Opens his own practice Named member of Illinois State Board of Health Raises money to build hospitals and nursing schools Saves stabbing victim’s life by sewing up the man’s heart— the first such successful operation While he may be remembered as the first doctor to operate on the human heart, his contributions were many, and not all medical. Baseball Star Was he “born to play baseball?” THE FACTS: ● ● ● ● ● ● ● Practices playing ball from the time he is a baby until he is 16 Gets a job as an extra player for the Birmingham Black Barons Turns down invitation to join major league team so he can finish high school Signed by New York Giants Named “Rookie of the Year” in 1951 at age 19 Drafted into U. S. Army at age 21 Returns to Giants and named Most Valuable Player in National League and Major League Player of the Year “Say Hey!” ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 22 Who Is Larry Little? Twenty years ago, he was the leader of the Black Panther Party. You could see him on television holding a loaded rifle. He was often arrested and was even in the FBI’s files. Today, Larry Little has a law degree and fights for racial justice in another way. He grew up in a housing project. His single mother worked in a tobacco factory. When he was a junior in high school, he volunteered to transfer from a black school to a white school so he could play basketball. Even when he had failing grades, his teachers passed him so he could continue to play ball. Until the last semester, that is, when he flunked out. In his bitterness, he joined the Black Panthers. As a Black Panther, he was often arrested for disorderly conduct, carrying a concealed weapon and other charges. But he also helped start a breakfast program for school children, a free ambulance service and testing for sickle-cell anemia. After dropping out of the Black Panther Party, he was elected to the Board of Aldermen and decided to study law, winning honors along the way. Anna J. Cooper Born August 10, 1859, the daughter of a slave and her master. By age nine, Anna served as a “pupil-teacher” at a college. She soon married, but in two years became a widow. She then entered a college which admitted blacks before the Civil War and received bachelor’s and master’s degrees. She wrote many articles and books about the importance of improving the status of black women and how this would help the black race and society in general. She especially thought that black women needed to speak up for themselves. She blamed black men for many of the black women’s problems. She was most interested in seeing that black women had the chance for higher education. She believed that both men and women were afraid of this, thinking it would make black women less feminine. She questioned the value of a society that did not encourage all women to achieve both in and outside of the home. Cooper said she had little hope for any civilization which ignored women. She felt that educating a woman would let her raise her children to be the types of citizens, parents, workers and leaders that would put an end to the dismal status of women. What do you think? Nannie Burroughs… helped to open the National Training School for Women and Girls in 1909 and served as its president. At the end of the first year the school had 31 students; 25 years later, more than 2,000 girls had been train in missionary work, domestic science, clerical and secretarial skills, and farming and printing. Students came from all over the United States, Africa and the Caribbean. The school’s attitude was that American Society demanded that black women work no less than men for survival. Charlotta A. Bass—ran as a vice-presidential candidate in 1952 for the Progressive Party. Though she got less than 1% of the vote, many of the platforms and programs she promoted have become popular in current political times. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 23 Quotes “We lived on a rich diet of party leftovers—turtle soup, roquefort cheese, lobsters, pies and cakes.” —Bayard Rustin, orator, whose parents did catering for wealthy families. “My father taught me and all of his students how to accept the unpleasant and to cope with it, instead of running away from it.” —Whitney Young, head of the Urban League. “The problems of racism, poverty, and war can all be summarized with one word, ‘violence,’ which seems to be fashionable in our society. If we do not stop this madness, we will certainly destroy ourselves and the whole world.” —Coretta Scott King “Equality is the basic goal of the N. A. A. C. P. and of the entire civil rights movement . . . . The barriers which set the Negro apart from his fellow Americans must be leveled before substantial and lasting progress can be made toward real equality.” —Roy Wilkins, head of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Floyd B. McKissick, former head of C. O. R. E. (Congress of Racial Equality), grew up in Asheville, North Carolina during the Great Depression. He learned to make wagons out of old lumber from torn-down houses so that he could haul and sell blocks of ice and newspapers. Fannie Lou Hamer, the youngest of 20 children in Mississippi said, “things got so tough I began to wish I was white” of her hard young life as a cotton picker at the age of six. “You are the ones who keep denying yourselves decent homes, decent jobs, decent schools. It ain’t never gonna change until you send some of our own people down there to represent us at the courthouse.” —Charles Evers, when mayor of Fayette, Mississippi, to voters. He then ordered the taxi drivers who worked for his cab company to put any black person out to walk who said they would not vote for a black person. Is that “putting your money where your mouth is?” Carl B. Stokes who was the first black to become mayor of a major American city (Cleveland, Ohio) lived for ten years in one room with his mother, brother, and the rats and roaches that filled the slum. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 24 As a boy, Richard Gordon Hatcher (a mayor of Gary, Indiana) was often sent home from school for “expressing his opinions too openly.” Did he get in trouble? His parents admired him for speaking up when he thought something was wrong. In 1965, Edward United States Senate in 85 years. W. Brooke became the first black man to sit in the Kenneth Bancroft Clark’s mother taught him to read before he even started school. He soon became a regular visitor to the New York Public Library. One day he decided he would go upstairs and look at the adult books. Was he turned away? No. What he discovered was a man named Arthur Schomburg. When this man had been a boy he had wondered why there were not stories about black people in his schoolbooks. His teacher told him that blacks had not done anything good enough to be included in a book. The boy could not believe this. So, when he grew up he searched and found many, many books about blacks and collected them into a large group which the New York Public Library bought and asked him manage. And this day, he had the chance to show the collection to a young boy who would grow up and become a psychologist, author and educator. “Though I grew up in the Ghetto, I did have people around me who cared. I was next to the youngest and they cushioned me from the deprivations to the point where I didn’t even know I was deprived. It’s the not caring that means Ghetto to children today.” —Ruby Dee, actress. “I have… Striven faithfully to give a true and just account of my own life in Slavery… to come to you just as I am a poor Slave Mother—not to tell you what I have heard but what I have seen—and what I have suffered.” —Harriet A. Jacobs, 1857 Black History Trail What started as an Eagle Scout project ten years ago is now the first national recreation trail devoted to black history. The Washington, D. C. Black History National Recreation Trail is the result of the efforts of Willard Andre Hutt who was 17 when he first began working on the project. The trail includes “magnet sites” that illustrate black history from slavery to the New Deal. Along the trail you can see black cemeteries that date from the early 19th century, the first African Methodist Episcopal church and the homes of Mary McLeod Bethune and Frederick Douglass. Hutt chose the sites and spent years working with local and national officials to get the trail, one of 800 national recreation trails, approved. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 25 Jackie “Moms” Mabley was a comedienne from Brevard, N.C. Bill White was president of the National Football League. 1989: Los Angeles city councilman, Nate Holden, decided to try to get guns off the streets by offering to pay $300 for each AK-47 or Uzi surrendered to police. An AK-47 had recently fired in a school classroom in the Los Angeles area. Savion Glover first practiced tap dancing in a graveyard behind his grandmother’s house. In 1989, at age 15, he appeared with Gregory Hines and Sammy Davis Jr. in the movie, Tap. Landon Turner is a basketball player. He once helped the Indiana University Hoosiers win the NCAA championship. An automobile accident left him with a crushed spinal cord and permanent paralysis. Did he give up basketball? No—now he just plays from his wheelchair! Michael Jackson’s 16-month Bad World Tour made more money ($125 million) and was seen by more people (4.4 million) than any other popular music venture in history. The tour’s 123 concerts spanned 15 countries on three continents. Who is Juan Williams? At age 34, he became one of America’s most outspoken voices on civil rights issues. He has worked for the Washington Post, serving as a White House correspondent and columnist. He’s also written a book, Civil Rights in America, which became a PBS series, Eyes on the Prize: America’s Civil Rights Years 19541965.” His current concerns? Racial tensions on college campuses and the outlook for the future in the areas of crime, poverty, education, drug abuse, homelessness and political leadership. When he speaks to students across the country, he encourages them to learn about and speak up for civil rights. Rosa Parks is known by many as the “Mother of the Civil Rights Movement.” Her famous refusal to give up her public bus seat led to the Montgomery bus boycott and helped give birth to rising civil rights activism in America. Dr. Mae Jemison had a dream and the dedication to follow it. A strong student and hard worker, she worked to become a doctor. She helped people get better in many poor countries. Then Mae was chosen for astronaut training! She became the first African American woman in space! Jackie Robinson stepped up to become the first African-American player in the major leagues of baseball. Though he played professionally for the Brooklyn Dodgers, Jackie played semi-pro football for the Honolulu Bears in 1941! Jackie’s civil rights activism helped create new opportunities for African Americans everywhere. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 26 Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. African Americans suffered under racial prejudice for decades after their emancipation. As free black citizens, they still could not vote, run for political office, or work in certain jobs. Their schools, restaurants, neighborhoods, churches, even drinking fountains were all made separate from white people – by law! Then some people decided to change things. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., a black minister, worked hard for equal rights for all people. He spoke for the black community, but he wanted people of all skin colors to get along with each other. Martin didn’t want blacks or whites to isolate themselves from their country, but work together for the common good of America. He encouraged others to help protest unfair laws through peaceful means. This Nobel Peace Prize recipient helped bring lasting change for African Americans. Booker T. Washington was a famous black educator at the Tuskegee Institute (pronounced tusk-E-gee) in the late 1800s. He taught young black men and women how to succeed in a world that didn’t want them to succeed. Critics thought he didn’t spend enough time fighting for civil rights, but Booker maintained his theory that the black community would only rise while partnered with education. Colin Powell is the first black U.S. Secretary of State under President George W. Bush! He advises and supports the president as a member of his cabinet. He was also the first black Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, the highest military position in the Department of Defense. Colin was raised in the South Bronyx of New York City by Jamaican parents. A brave four-star general, Colin also helped lead our country through the Persian Gulf War. George Washington Carver may be one of the most famous African American scientists. This farming wizard figured out how to create more than 300 products from peanuts, not to mention sweet potatoes and pecans! George also directed the agricultural department at Tuskegee Industrial Institute in Alabama. He advised farmers to plant different crops each year to help put nutrients back into the soil. George’s discoveries and ideas made the farming industry grow and grow and grow in the South! Condoleezza Rice is the National Security Advisor to President George W. Bush. As a young girl, Condoleezza trained to be a concert pianist and competitive ice skater! Condoleezza advises the president on important security issues. She helps make sure that we can live in peace and safety in our great country! She is an amazing U.S. government leader! Barack Obama is only the fifth African American U.S. senator. One of his most important goals as senator is to pass laws that would help poor Americans get help when they are sick. In 2008, he became the first African American to be elected president of the United States. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 27 Sidney Poitier is a famous African American actor. After practicing very hard—and even getting turned down a few times – Sidney broke into the Hollywood movie industry. He even won an Oscar for Best Actor in one of his several films! Sidney was also the first black actor to have his hands and feet imprinted in the cement of Grauman’s Chinese Theater in Hollywood. Stevie Wonder is arguably the best African American musician of this century because his musical talent is accompanied by blindness. Stevie has never allowed his handicap to stop his life goals. At age 11, he started his musical career and gradually learned to play five instruments! Arthur Ashe broke the color barrier to become one of the best African American tennis players of this century. He won the Wimbledon tennis tournament! Arthur used the prestige of his position to become a self-named “ambassador of what was right.” He overcame many obstacles in his life and in the lives of others with tireless civil rights activism. Maggie Lena Walker became the first female bank president in 1903. She was a very famous businesswoman in her time. She headed the St. Luke Penny Savings Bank, which was founded by the Grand United Order of St. Luke. This group taught African Americans how to save money and support each other in business. Critics say Michael Jordan is the best basketball player in the history of the game. He attended the University of North Carolina on a basketball scholarship, but left to help the Chicago Bulls win five NBA championships. Michael also led the U.S. Olympic basketball “Dream Team” to win gold medals at two different Olympics! A famous poet, Langston Hughes was first published while still attending school. His 8th grade class even voted him as their class poet! Langston read the works of many talented writers in order to find his own style. His experimentation with different styles of writing established a reputation of creative genius. Later, Langston was known as the “Poet Laureate of the Negro Race.” Billie Holiday belted out songs that told the story of her troubled life. Her hurts and regrets were given to the audience. Billie always wore white gardenias in her hair while singing her blues tunes. People called sometimes her “Lady Day.” Billie Holiday is an African American music legend known around the world for her vocal talent in the blues . Serena and Venus Williams are a dynamite pair of tennis players! These sister pros compete against each other on the court, but still remain close friends. Serena made history when she won three Grand Slam titles in a row. She won 19 career singles titles! The sisters also do television commercials and modeling. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 28 and Others The Rev. Dr. Ralph David Abernathy, an organizer and president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. Crispus Attucks, agitator who led group that precipitated the “Boston Massacre”, March 5, 1770. James Baldwin, author, playwright; The Fire Next Time, Blues for Mister Charlie, Just Above My Head. Imamu Amiri Baraka, poet, playwright. James P. Beckwourth, western fur-trader, scout, after whom Beckwourth Pass in northern California is named. Henry Blair, obtained patents (believed the first issued to a black) for a corn-planter, 1834, and a cotton-planter, 1836. Julian Bond, civil rights leader first elected to the Georgia state legislature, 1965; helped found Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee. Edward Bouchet, 1852-1918, first black to earn a Ph.D., Yale, 1876, at a U.S. university; first black elected to Phi Beta Kappa. Thomas Bradley, elected mayor of Los Angeles, 1973. Ruby Bridges, became the first black child to desegregate a white school. She was six years old when she first attended the elementary school in New Orleans, Louisiana. Andrew F. Brimmer, first black member, 1966, Federal Reserve. Edward W. Brooke, attorney general, 1962, of Massachusetts; first black elected to U.S. Senate, 1967, since 19th century. William Wells Brown, 1815-1884, novelist, dramatist; first American black to publish a novel. Dr. Ralph Bunche, 1904-1971, first black to win the Nobel Peace Prize, 1950; undersecretary of the United Nations. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 29 George E. Carruthers, physicist; developed the Apollo 16 lunar surface ultraviolet camera/spectrograph. Charles Waddell Chestnut, author known primarily for his short stores, including The Conjure Woman. Shirley Chisholm, first black woman elected to House of Representatives, Brooklyn, N.Y., 1968. Rev. Donald C. Christian, minister, economic development planner, first black on General Motors Board of Directors. Countee Cullen, 1903-1946, poet; won many literary prizes. Lt. Gen. Benjamin O. Davis, Jr., West Point, 1936, first black Air Force general, 1954. William L. Dawson, 1886-1970, Illinois congressman, first black chairman of a major House of Representatives committee. Isaiah Dorman, 19th century, U. S. Army interpreter, killed with Custer, 1876, at Battle of the Little Big Horn. Aaron Douglas, 1900-1979, painter; called father of black American art. William Edward Burghardt Du Bois, 1868-1963, historian, sociologist; a founder of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP), 1909, and founder of its magazine The Crisis; author, The Souls of Black Folk. Paul Laurence Dunbar, 1872-1906, poet, novelist; won fame with Lyrics of Lowly Life, 1896. Ralph Ellison, b. 1914, novelist, won 1952 National Book Award, for Invisible Man. Estevanico, explorer, led Spanish expedition of 1538 into the American Southwest. James Farmer, a founder of the Congress of Racial Equality, 1942; assistant secretary, Department of Health, Education and Welfare, 1969. Henry O. Flipper, 1856-1940, first black to graduate, 1877, from West Point. Shirley Franklin, Atlanta Mayor; first woman African American mayor of a major Southern U.S. city. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 30 Vonetta Flowers, became the first African American to win an Olympic gold medal during the Winter Games. Her victory came while competing in the two-man bobsleigh race at Salt Lake City in the 2002 Games. Charles Fuller, b. 1939, Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright; A Soldier’s Play. Marcus Garvey, 1911, founded Universal Negro Improvement Association. Kenneth Gibson, Newark, N. J., mayor, 1970-1986. Charles Gordone, won 1970 Pulitzer Prize in Drama, with No Place to Be Somebody. Vice Admiral Samuel L. Gravely, Jr., first black admiral, 1971, served in World War II, Korea, and Vietnam; commander Third Fleet. Jupiter Hammon, c. 1720—1800, poet; the first black American to have his works published, 1761. Patricia Roberts Harris, 1924-1985, U. S. ambassador to Luxemburg, 1965-67, secretary; Department of Housing and Urban Development, 1977-1979, Department of Health and Human Services, 1979-1981. Chester Himes, 1909-1984, novelist, Cotton Comes to Harlem. Dr. William A. Hinton, 1883-1959, developed the Hinton and Davies-Hinton tests for detection of syphilis; first black professor, 1949, at Harvard Medical School. Benjamin L. Hooks, first black member, 1972-1979, Federal Communications Commission; executive director, 1977, NAACP. The Rev. Jesse Jackson, b. 1941, national director, Operation Bread Basket; campaigned for Democratic presidential nomination, 1984. Maynard Jackson, elected Mayor of Atlanta, 1973. Gen. Daniel James, Jr., first black 4-star general, 1975; Commander, North American Air Defense Command. Pvt. Henry Johnson, 1897-1929, the first American decorated by France in World War I with the Croix de Guerre. James Weldon Johnson, 1871-1938, poet, lyricist, novelist; to Florida bar; U.S. consul in Venezuela and Nicaragua. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 31 first black admitted Barbara Jordan, b. 1936, former congresswoman from Texas; member, House Judiciary Committee. Vernon E. Jordan, executive director National Urban League, 1972. Ernest E. Just, 1883-1941, marine biologist, studied egg development; author, Biology of Cell Surfaces, 1941. Lewis H. Latimer, 1848-1928, associate of Thomas Edison; supervised installation of first electric street lighting in New York City. Jacob Lawrence, 1917-2000, artist, educator; recognized as one of the most acclaimed artist of the 20th century for translating African American history through art. William Alexander Leidesdorff, first African American millionaire; owned extensive lands, a hotel, and a steamboat in California; first known black diplomat in U.S. Benjamin Mays, educator, civil rights leader; headed Morehouse College, 1940-67. Wade H. McCree, Jr., solicitor general of the U.S., 1977-1981. Donald E. McHenry, U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, 1979-1981. Dorie Miller, 1919-1943, Navy hero of Pearl Harbor attack; awarded the Navy Cross. Ernest N. Morial, elected first black mayor of New Orleans, 1977. Toni Morrison, novelist; Son of Solomon, Tar Baby. Willard Motley, 1912-1965, novelist; Knock on Any Door. Elijah Muhammad, founded Black Muslims, 1931. Pedro Alonzo Niño, navigator of the Nina, one of Columbus’ three ships on his first voyage of discovery to the New World, 1492. Adam Clayton Powell, early civil rights leader, congressman, 1945-1969; chairman, House Committee on Education and Labor, 1960-1967. Joseph H. Rainey, first black elected to House of Representatives, 1869, from South Carolina. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 32 A. Philip Randolph, 1889-1979, organized the Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters, 1925; organizer of 1941 and 1963 March on Washington movements; vice president, AFL-CIO. Charles Rangel, congressman from New York City, 1970; chairman, Congressional Black Caucus. Hiram R. Revels, first black U. S. senator, elected in Mississippi, served 1870-1871. Wilson C. Riles, elected, 1970, California State Superintendent of Public Instruction. Norbert Rillieux, invented a vacuum pan evaporator, 1846, revolutionizing the sugar-refining industry. Paul Robeson, actor and concert singer, graduated 1st in class at Rutgers University, 1918, Phi Beta Kappa; graduate Columbia University law school, 1923. Carl T. Rowan, prize-winning journalist; director of the U. S. Information Agency, 1964, the first black to sit on the National Security Council; U. S. ambassador to Finland, 1963. John B. Russwurm, with Samuel E. Cornish founded, 1827, the nation’s first black newspaper, Freedom’s Journal, in New York City. Bayard Rustin, organizer of the 1963 March on Washington; executive director, A. Phillip Randolph Institute. Peter Salem, at the Battle of Bunker Hill, June 17, 1775, shot and killed British commander Major John Pitcairn. Ntozake Shange, b. Paulette Williams, 1948, writer, For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide/When the Rainbow is Enuf, a hit show on Broadway. Bishop Stephen Spottswood, board chairman of NAACP, 1961-1974. Willard Townsend, organized the United Transport Service Employees, 1935 (redcaps, etc.); vice president AFL-CIO Nat Turner, 1800-1831, leader of the most significant of over 200 slave revolts in U.S. history, in Southampton, VA; he and 16 others were hanged. Alice Walker, b. 1944, novelist, author of best-selling and award-winning The Color Purple. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 33 Dr. Robert C. Weaver, b. 1907, first black member of the U. S. Cabinet, secretary, Department of Housing and Urban Development, 1966. Phillis Wheatley, poet; second American woman and first black woman to have her works published, 1770. Walter White, executive secretary, NAACP, 1931-1955. Roy Wilkins, 1901-1981, executive director, NAACP, 1955-1977. Granville T. Woods, 1856-1910, invented the third-rail system now used in subways, a complex railway telegraph device that helped reduce train accidents, and an automatic air brake. Dr. Carter G. Woodson, historian; founded Association for the Study of Negro Life and History, 1915, and Journal of Negro History, 1916. First created Black History Month. Richard Wright, 1908-1960, novelist; Native Son, Black Boy. Frank Yerby, b. 1916, first best-selling American black novelist. Andrew Young, civil rights leader, congressman from Georgia, U. S. ambassador to the United Nations, 1977-79; mayor of Atlanta, 1982. Whitney M. Young, Jr., executive director, 1961, National Urban League; author, lecturer, newspaper columnist. Black Servicemen About 5,000 blacks served in the Continental Army during the American Revolution, mostly in integrated units, some in all-black combat units. Some 200,000 blacks served in the Union Army during the Civil War; 38,000 gave their lives; 22 won the Medal of Honor, the nation’s highest award. Of 367,000 blacks in the armed forces during World War I, 100,000 served in France. More than 1,000,000 blacks served in the armed forces during World War II; allblack fighter and bomber AAF units and infantry divisions gave distinguished service. In 1954 the policy of all-black units was finally abolished. Of 274,937 blacks who served in the armed forces during the Vietnam War (1965-1974), 5,681 were killed in combat. Black soldiers also served during Desert Storm and the War on Terrorism. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 34 Black Lifesavers of the Outer Banks Before the advent of the U.S. Coast Guard, people who lived along the coast of North Carolina’s Outer Banks took it upon themselves to try to rescue people from the area of the Atlantic Ocean known as “The Graveyard of the Atlantic.” Their motto was, “You don’t have to come back—you just have to go out.” Each lifesaving station was equipped with surfboats and with horses and wagons to haul the boats up and down the beach. In time a system of roundthe-clock patrols was put into effect, by which a surfman from each station would walk halfway to the next station, check in at a little shack called a “halfway house” and then walk back to his own station again. In this manner, for many years, approximately every three and a half miles along the entire length of this coast there was a surfman on foot or horse patrol, day and night, 365 days each year. At the same time a constant watch was also maintained in the lookout tower of each station. The basic responsibility of the surfman on patrol was to try to spot vessel which had come too close to shore and warn them off before they were wrecked. For this purpose he carried a specially designed flare with which to signal vessels in danger, and hundreds of ships were saved in this manner. Often, especially during storms, the surfman would discover the vessels already in the surf or founded on sandbars offshore. At night sometimes his first awareness of trouble would be the sound of shrill voices crying for help. Unless the wrecked vessel had already broken up, with crewmen and passengers trying to swim ashore or drifting in on wreckage, the surfman would normally rush back to his station for help. Frequently when the vessel was close enough to shore the lifesavers would fire a line over the wreck and haul the survivors to safety in what was known as a breeches buoy. Black Heroes of September 11th! On September 11, 2001, terrorists attacked American soil for the first time. During the tragic events, many volunteers surfaced from around the country to help repair the awful damage. The heroes and helpers in New York and Washington, D.C. led the way towards restoration. Those public service figures helped put our nation back together again. African Americans have been active in public service roles, such as a firefighter, police officer, EMT, ambulance driver, or nurse. Americans tend to think of these folks as neighbors, friends, co-workers, or relatives... as possessing ordinary lives. However, the lives of our African American heroes and helpers are timeless biographies of extraordinary heroism and honor. ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 35 Index Abernathy, Ralph David 29 Allen, Richard 11 Anderson, Charles Alfred 6 Ashe, Arthur 28 Attucks, Crispus 29 Baldwin, James 29 Banneker, Benjamin 10 Baraka, Imamu Amiri 29 Bass, Charlotta A. 23 Beckwourth, James P. 29 Blair, Henry 29 Bond, Julian 29 Bouchet, Edward 29 Bradley, Thomas 29 Bridges, Ruby 29 Brimmer, Andrew F. 29 Brooke, Edward W. 29 Brooks, Gwendolyn 13 Brown, William Wells 29 Bunche, Ralph 29 Burroughs, Nannie 23 Carruthers, George E. 30 Carver, George Washington 27 Charles, Ray 8 Chestnut, Charles Waddell 30 Chisholm, Shirley 30 Christian, Donald C. 30 Clark, Kenneth Bancroft 25 Cole, Nat King 11 Cooper, Anna J. 23 Cullen, Countee 30 Davis, Benjamin O. Jr. 30 Dawson, William L. 30 Dee, Ruby 25 Dixon, Dean 17 Dorman, Isaiah 30 Douglas, Aaron 30 Douglass, Frederick 19 Drew, Charles Richard 11 Du Bois, W. E. B. 30 Du Sable, Jean Baptiste 12 Dunbar, Paul Laurence 30 Ellison, Ralph 30 Estevanico 30 Evers, Charles 24 Farmer, James 30 Flipper, Henry O. 30 Flowers, Vonetta 31 Franklin, Shirley 30 Fuller, Charles 31 Garvey, Marcus 31 Gibson, Kenneth 31 Glover, Savion 26 Gordone, Charles 31 Gravely, Samuel L. Jr. 31 Hamer, Fannie Lou 24 Hammon, Jupiter 31 Handy, W.C. 13 Hansberry, Lorraine 8 Harris, Patricia Roberts 31 Hastie, William Henry 15 Hatcher, Richard Gordon 25 Henson, Matthew 8 Himes, Chester 31 Hinton, William A. 31 Holden, Nate 26 Holiday, Billie 28 Hooks, Benjamin L. 31 Hughes, Langston 28 Hutt, Willard Andre 25 Jackson, Jesse 31 Jackson, Mahalia 20 Jackson, Maynard 31 Jackson, Michael 26 Jacobs, Harriet A. 25 James, Daniel Jr. 31 Jemison, Mae 26 Joel, Lawrence 19 Johnson, Henry 31 Johnson, James Weldon 31 Jones, Marion 27 Jordan, Barbara 32 Jordan, Michael 28 Jordan, Vernon E. 32 Just, Ernest E. 32 King, Coretta Scott 24 King, Martin Luther Jr. 27 Latimer, Lewis H. 32 Lawrence, Jacob 32 Leidesdorff, William 32 Little, Larry 23 Mabley, Jackie “Moms” 26 Marshall, Thurgood 20 Matzeliger, Jan Ernst 14 Mays, Benjamin 32 Mays, Willie 22 McCree, Wade H. Jr. 32 McHenry, Donald E. 32 McKissick, Floyd B. 24 Miller, Dorie 32 Morial, Ernest N. 32 Morrison, Toni 32 Motley, Willard 32 Muhammad, Elijah 32 Nino, Pedro Alonzo 32 Obama, Barack 7 Owens, Jesse 10 Parks, Rosa 26 Poitier, Sidney 28 Powell, Adam Clayton 32 Powell, Colin 27 Price, Leontyne 18 Rainey, Joseph H. 32 Randolph, A. Philip 33 ©Carole Marsh/The Best Book of Black Biographies/page 36 Rangel, Charles 33 Revels, Hiram R. 33 Rice, Condoleezza 27 Riles, Wilson C. 33 Rillieux, Norbert 33 Robeson, Paul 33 Robinson, Jackie 26 Rowan, Carl T. 33 Rudolph, Wilma 15 Russwurm, John B. 33 Rustin, Bayard 33 Salem, Peter 33 Shange, Ntozake 33 Spottswood, Stephen 33 Stokes, Carl B. 24 Townsend, Willard 33 Tubman, Harriet 16 Turner, Landon 26 Turner, Nat 33 Walker, Alice 33 Walker, Maggie Lena 28 Washington, Booker T. 27 Waters, Ethel 21 Weaver, Robert C. 34 Wheatley, Phillis 34 White, Bill 26 White, Walter 34 Wilkins, Roy 34 Williams, Juan 26 Williams, Daniel Hale 22 Williams, Serena & Venus 28 Wonder, Stevie 28 Woods, Granville T. 34 Woodson, Carter G. 34 Wright, Richard 34 Yerby, Frank 34 Young, Andrew 34 Young, Whitney M. Jr. 34 “Can do!” lives of the famous and just folks Inventors, explorers, entrepreneurs. Astronauts, entertainers, sports stars. Doctors, lawyers, singers of the blues. Champions of freedom. The famous and just folks. What do these many African Americans have in common? The dramatic stories of their lives! Overcoming hardship. Using failures as the stepping stones to success. Lives lived with pizzazz! Perseverance in spite of all obstacles. Each bio proves to young readers that you, too, “can do!” “Inspirational—kudos to Ms. Marsh for celebrating the diversity of talent in the black community!” —Mary Pride “My students were just blown away by these bios! They really began to understand that people aren’t born successful—they make themselves that way, and it doesn’t happen overnight!” —4th grade teacher EDUCATIONAL! HISTORICAL! FACTUAL! The Author Carole Marsh is a native of Marietta, Georgia. She always knew she wanted to be a writer. In 1972, she started Marsh Media Methods, a public relations and corporate communications firm in Rocky Mount, North Carolina. She won many awards for her work including being named Communicator of the Year. Marsh is the creator of the State Experience, a series of educational books and materials widely used in schools across the country; this series recently received a Teachers’ Choice award for excellence. The Artist Cecil Anderson is a native of Mobile, Alabama. He is a professional visual artist with a diverse artistic background, including both graphic and fine art experiences. His unique, self-taught style of fine art has been exhibited throughout the Southeast. Anderson designs layouts for many of Gallopade International’s appealing kids’ books. ISBN-13: 978-0-635-01578-5 PRICE: $7.95 US 50795 9 780635 015785 7 10430 01632 www.gallopade.com 7